Supreme Court of Canada
City of Toronto v. Ontario Jockey Club, [1934] S.C.R.
223
Date: 1934-02-06
The Corporation of
the City of Toronto (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Ontario Jockey Club
(Defendant) Respondent.
1933: November 22, 23; 1934: February 6.
Present: Duff C.J. and Rinfret, Smith,
Cannon and Hughes JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Assessment and taxation—Land used as race
course—Potential value as subdivision—Basis of assessment—Assessment of
buildings—Business assessment—Assessment Act, R.S.O. 1927, c. 238, ss. 4, 40
(1) (2) (3), 9 (1) (j), (2), (12).
The land in question was owned by respondent,
the “Ontario Jockey Club”, an incorporated company, and it used the land as a
race course, carrying on and managing race meetings thereon. Under the Assessment
Act, R.S.O. 1927, c. 238, the appellant city assessed the land on the basis
of its potential value as a subdivision, and also assessed for the value of the
buildings thereon and for business assessment. The assessments were upheld (with
variations in amounts) by the Ontario Railway and Municipal Board. The Court of
Appeal for Ontario confirmed the assessment of the land alone at the amount
fixed by the Board, but struck off the amounts for buildings and for business
assessment. The city appealed.
Held: (1) The
buildings should be assessed only at their value for the purpose of being
wrecked and removed, as, except to that extent, they added nothing to the
potential value of the land as a subdivision. It was improper to value the land
as for purpose of a subdivision and then value the buildings on the basis of
their being used for purposes of a race track. (Secs. 4, 40 (1) (2) (3), of the
Act particularly considered).
2. The fact that s. 9 (2) of the Act deals
with clubs, and makes liable to a business assessment “every proprietory or
other club in which meals are furnished * * *” does not necessarily exclude all
clubs from the operation of s. 9 (1) (j), making liable for business
assessment every person carrying on any of certain specified businesses “or any
business not before * * * specially mentioned”. The
question of whether or not respondent came within s. 9 (1) (j) could
only be determined by investigating the facts concerning its organization and
its operations; and there was evidence on which the Board could properly arrive
at its conclusion that respondent was occupying or using the land for the
purpose of a business within the meaning of s. 9 (1) (j), in view of s.
9 (12) which excludes the application of the ejusdem generis rule.
A corporation’s liability to business
assessment in connection with its lands on which it carries on its affairs does
not depend on whether or not a profit is being made.
In the result, the judgment of the Court of
Appeal, [1932] O.R. 637, was varied, by increasing the valuation for assessment
purposes by a sum for the value of the buildings for wreckage purposes, and by
declaring respondent liable for business assessment (based on the valuation of
the property as fixed by this Court).
[Page 224]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Ontario which
allowed an appeal by the present respondent from the judgment of the Ontario
Railway and Municipal Board. The Board had fixed the assessment of certain land
and buildings thereon (owned by the present respondent) at $765,308, being
$565,308 on the land and $200,000 on the buildings, and had fixed a business
assessment of $191,325. The Court of Appeal reduced the assessment of the land
and buildings to $565,308, being $565,308 (as fixed by the Board) on the land
and no amount on the buildings, and also struck out the business assessment.
The material facts of the case are sufficiently
stated in the judgment now reported.
C.M. Colquhoun K.C. and J.P. Kent for the
appellant.
D.L. McCarthy K.C. and F.W. Fisher for
the respondent.
The judgment of the court was delivered by
SMITH J.—This is an appeal concerning the
assessment of the respondent’s Woodbine Race Course, situated in the city of
Toronto.
The Assessor of the appellant, in the year 1931,
assessed the respondent, in respect of the 85.88 acres of land owned by the
respondent, for $622,630, and the buildings for $202,500, making a total of
$825,130. The residence of the Superintendent, with the land on which it was
erected, was assessed separately for $4,000, which amount was deducted from the
total of $825,130, leaving an assessment of $821,130, to which was added 25 per
cent. for business assessment, amounting to $205,282.
The respondent appealed to the Court of
Revision, which confirmed the assessment except as to the business assessment,
which was reduced to $191,385.
An appeal was taken to His Honour Judge Denton,
who confirmed the decision of the Court of Revision.
From this decision the respondents again
appealed to the Ontario Municipal Board, which placed the assessment of the
lands used for race track purposes at $565,308, and the buildings at $200,000,
making together $765,308, to which was added 25 per cent. for business assess-
[Page 225]
ment, amounting to $191,325. In addition to
these items, there was added an assessment of $4,000 for land and house
occupied by the Superintendent, which has not been in dispute.
The respondent further appealed to the Court of
Appeal for Ontario, which confirmed the assessment of the land at the amount
fixed by the Ontario Municipal Board, namely, $565,308, but struck off the
$200,000 on buildings and the $191,325 for business assessment.
From that judgment this appeal is taken.
The Court of Appeal held that, as the assessment
on the land fixed by the Ontario Municipal Board was arrived at on the basis of
its potential value as a subdivision, which would involve the destruction and
removal of the buildings, nothing should be added for the value of these
buildings.
Section 4 of the Assessment Act, R.S.O.
1927, ch. 238, enacts that all real property in Ontario shall be liable to
taxation, subject to certain exceptions that have no application to this case.
Section 40 (1), (2) and (3), reads as
follows:
40. (1) Subject to the provisions of this
section, land shall be assessed at its actual value.
(2) In assessing land having any buildings
thereon, the value of the land and buildings shall be ascertained separately,
and shall be set down separately in columns 14 and 15 of the assessment roll
and the assessment shall be the sum of such values. The value of the buildings
shall be the amount by which the value of the land is thereby increased.
(3) To remove doubts it is hereby declared
that the cost of a building is only one of the matters which should be
considered in ascertaining the amount for which a building should be assessed,
and if it is found that a building, either because of its condition as to
repair or of its inappropriateness to the location in which it is found or
because of any other circumstances affecting its value, increases the value of
the land by less than the cost of the building, or the cost of replacing it,
such less sum shall be the amount for which the building shall be assessed
under subsection 2; the meaning of that subsection being that buildings
shall be assessed for the amount of the difference between the selling value of
the whole property and the selling value of the land if there were no buildings
on it.
Mr. Justice Riddell, in his reasons, says:
The actual value is to be determined by the
evidence, and, not only the present use of the land and the benefits derived
therefrom by the owner, but all the potentialities are to be taken into
consideration.
He cites a long list of authorities for this
proposition, which has been accepted and acted upon by both sides throughout
and was not questioned here. On this prin-
[Page 226]
ciple the City Assessor, Mr. Harry Nixon,
states in his evidence that he assessed the lands of the respondent on the
basis of their potential value as a subdivision, and not on the basis of their
value as now used by the respondent, as a race course; and neither he nor any
other witness gave any evidence as to the value of this land for the purposes
of a race course.
The whole evidence of both sides before the
Municipal Board was directed to establishing the potential value of the land as
a subdivision. It was evidently assumed throughout that the highest actual
value that could be given to the land was on the basis of its potential value
as a subdivision.
The Assessor, at p. 179, produced his plan of a
subdivision, Exhibit 23, and testified that he made his estimate of the value
at which he arrived for assessment on the frontage value of the various lots
shown on this plan for building purposes, arriving at these values from the
assessed values and sale prices of lands surrounding and in the neighbourhood
of the lands of the respondent. On the same page he says, speaking of this
plan:
We used that in the land revision work to
estimate the present assessment.
At p. 180:
The information that we used,
Mr. Geary, has to do with the property surrounding, north and east, of
Woodbine Park.
He goes on to say that he got the valuations by
comparing in that way, and arrived at a total lot frontage of 21,072 feet, and
in that way arrived at the value of $791,175, the foot frontage value varying
according to the situation of the various lots. At pages 189, 198 and 199 he
refers to the use of the land for a going concern as one of the elements to be
taken into consideration in arriving at the value, and says he knows “of no
other way of arriving at a piece of property, that is, in the city limits.”
Finally, however, he abandons this, as shown in the following abstract from his
evidence at p. 205:
Exhibit 27. Statement of figures on proposed
plan of subdividing Woodbine Park.
Q. In this you eliminated all the
buildings?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you treat it purely as a
subdivision?
A. Yes.
[Page 227]
Q. Now, I want to ask you: did you arrive
at any figures as a going concern?
A. No.
Q. You never adopted that?
A. No, sir.
The learned Chairman of the Municipal Board in
his reasons says:
There was considerable evidence offered,
both by the appellants and by the City of Toronto, setting out the way in which
the assessment of this property had been originally made, and setting out the
value of the property both for race track purposes, and as a subdivision in the
City of Toronto in the event of the racing being abandoned and the property
sold as a subdivision.
I am unable to find any evidence from any witness
as to the actual value of this property for race track purposes, and it is
evident that the value fixed by the Board was on the evidence offered as to its
potential value as a subdivision, there being no evidence that would justify
the finding of value arrived at on any other basis. The Board, therefore,
having arrived at its valuation of these lands on the basis of a subdivision,
which involved the destruction of all the buildings before the land could be
used and disposed of in lots as a subdivision, the buildings added nothing to
that potential value of the property beyond their value for the purpose of
being wrecked and removed. On this branch of the case I am in entire agreement
with the reasons clearly set out by Mr. Justice Riddell, and also with his
view that the question involved is one of law.
It is manifestly improper to value the land for
the purpose of a subdivision, which would involve the destruction of the
buildings, and then value the buildings on the basis of their being used for
the purposes of a race track. If the buildings were to be valued on that basis,
the land would have to be valued on that basis also.
I find that the Court of Appeal has overlooked
the evidence at p. 95 as to the value of the buildings for wrecking purposes,
and it was not, I think, referred to on the argument here. The witness, Joseph
Teperman, called by the respondent, examined as to the cost of wrecking and
removing the buildings and the value of the wreckage, says:
We would take the entire site and we would still
be prepared to pay $5,000.
[Page 228]
Q. For all the buildings?
A. For all the buildings, everything that
is situated on the ground.
The CHAIRMAN: Q. So you would lose $5,000
on the one stand and you would make up on the other?
A. Make up on the other.
There should therefore be added to the amount
fixed by the Court of Appeal this sum of $5,000 as the value of the buildings
for wreckage purposes.
The question of whether or not the respondent is
liable for business assessment is, perhaps, not so clear. Mr. Colquhoun,
on behalf of the appellant, presented a very able argument in support of his
contention that the respondent was liable to a business assessment by virtue of
sec. 9 of the Act, which reads in part as follows:
9. (1) Irrespective of any assessment of
land under this Act, every person occupying or using land for the purpose of
any business mentioned or described in this section shall be assessed for
a sum to be called “Business Assessment” to be computed by reference to the
assessed value of the land so occupied or used by him, as follows:
(j) Every person carrying on the
business of a photographer or of a theatre, concert hall, or skating rink, or
other place of amusement, or of a boarding stable, or a livery, or the letting
of vehicles or other property for hire, or of a restaurant, eating house, or
other house of public entertainment, or of a hotel or any business not before
in this section or in clause (k) specially mentioned, for a
sum equal to twenty-five per centum of the assessed value.
(2) Every proprietory or other club in
which meals are furnished, whether to members or other, shall be liable to a
business assessment for a sum equal to twenty-five per centum of the assessed
value of the land occupied or used for the purposes of the club.
He argues that the respondent carries on a
business, and therefore comes within the language of subsection 1 (j)
quoted above, although not expressly mentioned, because the ejusdem generis rule
does not apply, by virtue of sec. 9 (12) which reads as follows:
(12) Wherever in this section general
words are used for the purpose of including any business which is not expressly
mentioned, such general words shall be construed as including any business not
expressly mentioned, whether or not such business is of the same kind as or of
a different kind from those expressly mentioned.
It seems clear that the mere fact that an
organization styles itself a club will not finally settle the question of
whether or not it is liable to assessment under subsection 1 (j).
The Ontario Jockey Club is an incorporated
company having a fixed capital represented by stock shares issued to
stockholders in the ordinary method. There is in the organization a system by
which people who are not stock-
[Page 229]
holders may become what is called “members” of
the club, endowing them with certain privileges at race meetings, and perhaps
on other occasions, not accorded to the public. These members, however, have no
voice in the management of the corporation affairs. The race meetings are carried
on and managed by the corporation. The moneys received for admission to the
races from the parimutuel betting system and from other sources are all paid to
the corporation, and are applied and paid out as the corporation directs. The
earnings or profits derived from these race meetings or any other uses to which
the property of the corporation may be put may be applied to payment of
dividends to the shareholders if the corporation so determine. The evidence is
that for the past two years there have been no profits, so that dividends could
not properly be paid except out of accumulated surplus, and none have been paid
during these two years. Whether any were paid in preceding years is not
disclosed.
It is clear that the question of whether or not
a corporation is liable for business assessment in connection with the lands
occupied by it, upon which its affairs are carried on, does not depend on
whether or not a profit is being made. A corporation, or an individual, for
instance, carrying on a mercantile business in a shop, is liable to business
assessment, quite regardless of whether the business is realizing a profit or
not.
It is no doubt a question of law whether or not
sec. 9 (2) quoted above, dealing with clubs, necessarily excludes all
clubs from the operation of sec. 9 (1). Having concluded, as stated above,
that sec. 9 (2) is not conclusive upon this point, the question of whether
or not this particular club comes within the provision of sec. 9 (1) can
only be determined by an investigation of the facts concerning its organization
and the operations which it carries on. It seems to me that there is evidence
upon which the Municipal Board could properly arrive at the conclusion which it
reached, that the respondent was occupying or using the land in question for
the purpose of a business within the meaning of sec. 9 (1), in view of the
provisions of subsection 12, which excludes the application of the ejusdem
generis rule.
[Page 230]
The appeal, therefore, upon this point must be
allowed. The valuation of the land for asssessment purposes, fixed by the Court
of Appeal, will be increased by the $5,000 referred to, and upon that valuation
the respondent is declared liable for business assessment, as provided by the
statute.
The appellant was obliged to come to this Court,
and is entitled to its costs of this appeal.
Appeal allowed, as above set forth,
with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: C.M.
Colquhoun.
Solicitors for the respondent: Ludwig,
Shuyler & Fisher.